[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Trump pulls Obama portrait from public display inside White House

The Fed, NY Fed, and Treasury Are Tendering for Eight Billion Global Citizens Through Stablecoins

This One Document Just EXPOSED DHS’s Big Lie About FEMA

The Ultimate Longevity Protocol: 10 Science-Backed Anti-Aging Strategies

AI Made a Movie About Its Own Future

"Super Steel": China Unveils Game-Changing Cryogenic Steel for Fusion Reactors

New Russian Missile. S8000 Banderol Cruise Missile

The Last Time This Signal CRASHED, Markets Followed!

Geologists Issue RED ALERT After Satellite Detects Sudden Uplift in Mount Rainier

Alaska Earthquake of 1964 and the Putin-Trump Summit

Thousands still without water in San Fernando Valley as repairs continue

Why the U.S. Buys So Much Nuclear Fuel From Russia | WSJ

'Anti-Racist' ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt Laments Rising 'Intermarriage Rates' Among Jews

Dog Persuades Thief To Return That Purse

California hospital covered up surge in stillbirths after Covid shots

‘I’d F*** Your Old Lady In The A**’: Liberal Mayor Berates Christian At LGBT Festival

Africa Set To Test Critical-Minerals-Backed Currency

Mapping Data Center Capacity Around The World

Cash Jordan: Illegals ‘Forcibly Evict’ LA Millionaires… Wiping Gated Community OFF THE MAP

Ivermectin for Autoimmune Disease and Arthritis

These Foods DESTROY Your LIVER

VIDEO: Your Legs Weaken First! Eat These 6 Foods to Strengthen Them FAST

VIDEO: A Bill Gates backed company is now producing butter with no animals, no plants, and no oils

VIDEO: VAXINATED SPERM UNDER THE MICROSCOPE

The AI industry is staring down the largest copyright class action in history

Millions of kids cannot read Declaration of Independence - due to education BS...VIDEO

These Are The Biggest Threats To Teens' Mental Health

President Trump Fired IRS Commissioner

Fermented Stevia Extract Kills Pancreatic Cancer Cells In Lab Tests

Sorry About That!


Miscellaneous
See other Miscellaneous Articles

Title: An expert reveals why you've been recycling wrong this whole time
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.sciencealert.com/an-expe ... ecycling-wrong-this-whole-time
Published: Jul 8, 2015
Author: FIONA MACDONALD
Post Date: 2015-07-08 06:29:35 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 310
Comments: 1

ScienceAlert...

Most of us go to great lengths to recycle our products, and feel pretty good when we dump our old envelopes and coffee cups into the designated paper bin instead of the regular trash. But now an expert in waste management has filled Vicky Gan from City Lab in on what actually ends up being recycled, and what holds up the process, and it turns out we've been doing it wrong all along.

To encourage people to recycle, most cities around the world give homes and workplaces bins broken down by plastic, paper or glass recycling bins. In some suburbs, these have been replaced by 'catch-all' recycling bins that take all these materials.

This has worked in one sense, because it gets people to recycle more and throw away less, but it's also led to much more contamination in the system. Because in reality, not all papers, plastic and glassware is made equal, and there's a lot more that dictates whether something is recyclable or not.

In fact, in Washington DC in the US, introducing larger residential recycling bins last year led to a 50 percent drop in the amount of profit that the city made from selling off its recyclables, according to a report by Aaron C. Davis over at The Washington Post. And they actually had to pay more to filter through the bins.

“By pushing to increase recycling rates with bigger and bigger bins - while demanding almost no sorting by consumers - the recycling stream has become increasingly polluted and less valuable, imperilling the economics of the whole system,” Davis wrote.

So what are the contaminants that are so detrimental to the system? We've listed below the ones we've been most guilty of.

Paper, cardboard and polystyrene food containers

Any of these containers that have been contaminated with food are a big no-no for recycling. Which means no pizza boxes, even if you've gone to the effort of scraping off all the food scraps.

This all comes down to oil soaking into the paper fibres. "Since the paper is mixed with water in a large churner, the oil eventually separates from the paper fibres. The oil does not dissolve in the water, instead it mixes in with the paper. The eventually result is new paper will [have] oil splotches," writes Stanford University's Buildings & Grounds Maintenance team.

Plastic and glass containers, on the other hand, are usually good to go in the recycling bin if they've been rinsed.

Plastic bags

These are a pain because they tend to below off the conveyer belt during processing and clog up all the other machinery in a recycling facility.

"At the material recovery facility in San Francisco, they have to shut down all the machines every night for at least an hour to go in and manually pick out all the pieces of plastic bag that have gone in there and jammed up the various machines,” Darby Hoover, a senior resource specialist at the Natural Resources Defence Council in the US, told Gan over at City Lab. Bottom line? Put them in the regular bin.

Paper cups

Turns out, these aren't actually paper. Most of the paper cups we buy our coffee in are actually coated with plastic, as Gan explains, which means they can't be processed properly with paper or plastic and can't be recycled. Same goes for Tyvek envelopes used for express post in the US.

Condiment packets

These are either made up of plastic or an aluminium-plastic blend. Either way, no one really wants them. “There’s nobody recycling those right now," Hoover told Gan.

Paper scraps

Sure, these are recyclable. But when they're put into catch-all recycling bins, they're pretty much impossible to sift out from all the other plastic and glass waste. This means that they - and everything around them - end up being thrown into the trash at the recycling plant anyway. A handy way to get them recycled is to staple them shut into a paper envelope marked 'shredded paper', says Hoover.

Find out more in Gan's report over at City Lab. And for an explanation of how recycling actually works, check out the episode of SciShow below:

Read these next:

Sydney installs machines that offer bus tickets in exchange for recycling 124-year-old patent reveals the proper way to use toilet paper Turns out we’ve been pooping all wrong, according to science

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

So can any of this recycling work efficiently?

NeoconsNailed  posted on  2015-07-08   10:09:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]